Information on this page has been taken from Bavington
Jones (1907) and Welby (1976)

"The old parish church stands at the top of St. James's Street.
The ancient edifice, which is now used as a chapel-of-ease for the parish,
is in an excellent state of preservation, having been restored in 1869.
It did not exist at the Conquest, but it was built before 1291; therefore,
it may be ascribed to the Norman period, of which the style of its
architecture affords corroborative evidence. Originally, it
consisted of only a nave and chancel, the building on the south side
having been added at an early date, probably in the reign of Edward II.,
to be used as the Courts of Admiralty and Chancery of the Cinque Ports.
A great deal of business was done in that old Court House in the Middle
Ages; but, in later years very little - the last sitting of the Court of
Admiralty there was about 30 years ago. When the old church in the
Castle fell into ruins, St. James's was used jointly as the parish and
garrison church, and was so continued until, after restoration, St.
Mary's-in-the-Castle was re-opened in 1862. The memorials of old
Dover families preserved in this church are numerous and interesting."
(J.B.J. 1907)

The earliest mention of the Church of St. James can
be found in the Domesday Monachorum and White Book of St. Augustine,
compiled during the time of Archbishop Lanfranc (c.1070-1089AD), which
names it as one of the four churches subordinate to
St Martin le Grand. The others were: St Peter (Market Square);
and St Nicholas and St John the Baptist, both of which were in the church
of St Martin le Grand.

A Visitation of the Diocese of Canterbury by the
Bishop Suffragan of Dover, Richard Rogers, on 29th September 1573, found the
church to be somewhat lacking:

"Compertum est that the comonion is
ministered in common Breade
Item theire Benefice is vacant and the Archebisshoppe is patron
Item the Channcell is in decay
Item John Askue commeth to church very syldome
Item Thomas Parker for that he refuseth to come to church
Item Robert Rowland for that he lyveth from his wiefe
Item Christian Rowland for that she hath had a chylde in fornicacon by
whome they can not lerne, neyther will she confesse
Item Mr. Thomas Watson, jurat, for that beinge Seased at ijd. a weke, he
will pay but jd. a weeke; Mathewe Jonson being seassed to pay jd. a weeke
he will pay but ob. (Sc. 1/2d.)" (DW 1976)

It is thought that the findings of this Visitation
prompted Queen Elizabeth's proclamation on 20th October 1573, which ordered
the bishops to keep their churches in "one uniform and godly order."

The earliest extant parish register for St. James
dates from 1594.

In 1634, Nathaniel Brent, Vicar General and Commissary
of Archbishop William Laud, visited the church and ordered the churchwardens
to move the pews from the east wall and to provide a decent communion table,
fenced off with a "decent and seemly rail" for the parishioners to come up
to for the celebration of the Sacrament, and also something to kneel upon.

During the war with the Netherlands (1652), local
blacksmith was paid to erect ironwork around the church to convert it into a
temporary prison for captured Dutch seamen.

There are relatively few entries in the parish
registers of deaths from the plague: in the period from May to December 1666
only 4 names are recorded, but the entry is accompanied by the following
note:

"more than these there died forty four
persons of the Plague whose names I know not, neither the particulars of
their burial." (DW 1976)

Plague victims were taken out of the town to
Archcliffe, where the bodies of rich and poor, young and old, were buried
together in mass graves, with no rites or ceremony.

Master Abraham Beere and Goodman Bowle were mentioned
in town records as "bearers of corpse," paid a shilling to risk their own
lives to transport the bodies of plague victims from their homes to the
burial grounds in hand carts.

Others like Crook-back Jane and Mother Randall were
said to have reaped a golden harvest as "searchers" of the dead. "T'was
a dreadful, yet useful calling."

In a Parish Return by Rev. William Tournay (Rector,
1795-1833), now in Lambeth Palace Library, the parish is described as
comprising 278 houses and about 70 acres of arable, pasture and gardens.
"There are some opulent inhabitants ... but none of note."

The Rector also had a vicarage at Hougham, and
services were held alternately on Sunday morning and afternoon so that the
Rector could also officiate at Hougham.

There was a free school in the parish, supported by
John Trevanion Esq., M.P.

There was no hospital or almshouse in the parish, but
"three decayed tenements which belong to the parish and being a nuisance to
the neighbourhood it is purposed to sell them under authority of an act of
Parliament obtained for the erection of a Poorhouse."

The Rector stated that there were "no Papists" in the
parish and, in his belief, "no Dissenters;" there were no more than 30
Methodists, and they had "not lately increased their numbers." He also
noted that there was no "Meeting House." This was presumably a
reference to the Quakers.

Old St James' Church was replaced by New St
James', about 100 yards north in Maison Dieu Road, when it became too
small to hold the congregation.

"The want of more church accommodation in St. James's parish was
felt as early as 1842, the adoption of pew rents at St. Mary's, at that
period, having caused so many to go to St. James's."(J.B.J. 1907)

"It was proposed then to build a new church at the cost of £3000;
but, as the subscription list hung fire at £500, the project was postponed
for 20 years, and then was carried out on a much larger scale, the old
parish church being vacated in 1862. For a time the disused fabric
had a neglected appearance - its windows broken, and walls falling into
decay." (J.B.J. 1907)

"In 1865, the use of it was granted to a small congregation of
French Protestants, under the pastorate of M. Biguet; but, in 1864,
(sic) it was again vacated, and a project for its restoration was
started. After an expenditure of about £11,000 on the new church, it
was rather a tax on the parish to so soon undertake a work of restoration;
but the spirit of modern Churchmanship, which cannot endure the sight of
an ancient sacred edifice going to ruin, was roused, and the year 1869 saw
old St. James's carefully restored ..." (J.B.J. 1907)

The church was altered and refurbished in 1868-9,
after which an organ was installed in the gallery at the west end of the
North Aisle. Built by Gray and Davison, of Euston Road, London, it was
hand-blown with a mechanical action contained in a painted softwood cabinet.
The front rank of pipes were made of zinc, tapered in construction and
painted, while the inside pipes were made of an alloy of 25% tin, 75% lead,
or wood.

On Sunday 19th March 1916 a German
seaplane dropped several bombs on the town killing 7 and injuring 30
persons. One bomb burst in the garden of a house on the corner of
Woolcomber Street and Trevanion Street and pieces penetrated the roof of the
church, causing a great deal of damage.

After the bombing in the Second World War, both
old and new churches were in ruins and the decision was made not to replace
them, so old St. James' was kept as a "tidy ruin" and has survived in that
state for the last 60 years. New St James' was demolished and the
ground on which it stood is now used as a playing field for St. Mary's
primary school.

New St James Church - now a school playing field

At the end of Maison Dieu Road is a walled green, now used as a playing field for the
adjoining primary school. This is all that remains of new St. James' church,
destroyed by enemy action in WW2.